Synopsis
A graphic novel by Chuck Bright
Art by Maureen Burdock
Goshena: Queen of the Big In-Betweena addresses questions of death and the afterlife with jest and satire, proposing alternative views on a subject that is often taboo. This surrealistic story features Goshena, hired to greet the newly deceased. Volatile and unpredictable, she has no qualms about throwing dissident arrivals to Jingles, her giant soul-eating frog.
Goshena's most recent assignment is to welcome Soul #24 (the number inscribed on his morgue drawer), a recalcitrant soul who refuses to accept that he has died and has reasons to return to the Living. But can he or must he go home with Goshena and Jingles? Or ... will he pass his death quiz and move toward the Light?
There are no harps or halos in Goshena's neck of the woods. This is the Big In-Betweena, the turbulent, fog-enshrouded space between life and death.
About the Author
Social work professional Chuck Bright hadn't planned on a writing career centered on death and the afterlife, but death turned out to be his wake-up call. Following the loss of several family members, friends, and coworkers, as well as two client suicides, between 2000 and 2001, Bright's social work career suddenly seemed meaningless. His greatest desire was to write.He therefore pursued his doctoral studies in social work with a plan in mind: if he had not written anything substantial by the time he received his PhD, he would return to social work full-time. But the cosmos had other plans in mind. Two and a half years into his doctoral studies, with not a word set to paper, Bright sat down one evening at the lake house he shared with his husband Andre, and, quite unexpectedly, words began to flow. An angry, impatient character named Goshena presented herself to him as ruler of a vast, turbulent space where life ends and death begins. By the time he finished his doctoral studies in 2007, Bright had completed not only his doctoral dissertation but nine of the books he would write in the twelve-volume Goshena series. He subsequently converted book 1, Goshena: Queen of the Big In-Betweena, into a graphic novel and adapted it into a three-act play. By the start of 2015, Bright had created a second series, called Dr. Chucky, an irreverent jab at psychotherapy in which a social worker named Dr. Chucky provides counseling to the dead. A book called Little Dorcas: The Executioner's Daughter, also adapted into a three-act play, soon followed. Bright has also written two additional plays: It's My Party and I'll Fly If I Want to and Trill-O-Gee! Chuck Bright holds a BA in sociology from Purdue University; an MSW from Loyola University, Chicago's School of Social Work; and a PhD in social work from the Jane Addams College of Social Work at the University of Illinois, Chicago. He has also taught courses in social work and psychology at various universities. Bright currently resides in Flossmoor, Illinois, a suburb of south Chicago, with his husband, Andre Latia. Goshena: Queen of the Big In-Betweena is his first graphic novel. ILLUSTRATOR Maureen Burdock, an award-winning transnational feminist artist and graphic novelist is the author of the F Word Project: Feminist Fables for the Twenty-first Century (McFarland, 2015).
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